care according to this syrian doctor who says he fled a makeshift hospital in the besieged city of holmes. he tells us almost everyone with medical training has left. in tripoli, a city of half a million, 20,000 syrians have sought refuge according to opposition sources. this woman waited more than a year before crossing the border with her mother, sister, and seven children, including two with special needs. all of them now live in one room in a row of storefronts occupied by refugees. "i can't stand living far away from home," she says. "even if the regime does not fall, i'm thinking about going back because it's my home." she said she's still proud to be a syrian and that if her generation does not topple assad's dictatorship, perhaps her children's generation will. staying overseas now, mitt romney arrived in israel tonight, the second leg of his foreign tour. president obama's challenger is hoping for a warmer reception there than he got in london where his comment about britain's olympic readiness caused a bit of an uproar. our political correspondent jan crawford is traveling with